Joining D9 Clube

The income potential of a D9 Clube affiliate can be increased via purchase of an optional affiliate package:

Bronze Trader – $249

Silver Trader – $499

Gold Trader – $998

Gold Trader+ – $1996

Conclusion

The betting platform side of D9 Clube on its own appears to be legitimate.

Customers pay $280 for a voucher that provides access to the D9 Clube platform for 52 weeks.

Betting tips are provided through the platform, which customers can act on via a BetFair account.

Unfortunately this side of the business is entirely let down by the attached MLM opportunity.

There’s no getting around the fact that D9 Clube’s compensation plan pays affiliates to recruit new affiliates.

This is chain-recruitment and alone symptomatic of a pyramid scheme.

A big question mark also hangs on the source of revenue D9 Clube affiliates’ weekly ROIs are paid from.

The company represents it’s from their own sports betting. If D9 Clube were able to consistently generate 30% to 150% ROIs on sports betting however, why would they be soliciting thousands of dollars from their affiliates?

Without dollar for dollar auditing of how D9 Clube ROIs are paid out, the source of ROI funds is difficult to clarify either way.

What we can look at is the inhouse betting platform. As a prospective D9 Clube affiliate, ask your potential upline for screenshots of their own BetFair account showing consistent ROIs.

If this information is unavailable, then ask for proof the betting platform is worth paying $280 for access to.

The logic here is that if D9 Clube’s own platform can’t provide affiliates similar weekly ROIs than what the company offered, then it’s a good bet newly invested funds are being shuffled around to pay off existing investors.

This would make D9 Clube a Ponzi scheme.

Supporting this is the fact that a large percentage of affiliate package funds are paid out in recruitment commissions. This would seem to hardly leave enough funds for D9 Clube to make bets on, let alone consistently pay out a weekly ROI with.

Even if we run with the assumption that D9 Clube are not recycling newly invested funds, regulatory compliance issues are still evident.

There is nothing on the D9 Clube website suggesting the company has registered to offer securities in any jurisdiction.

In providing a passive ROI, D9 Clube’s affiliate package easily qualify as a securities offering. Failing confirmation D9 Clube have registered with a securities regulator, it appears the company is offering unregistered securities.

Pay to play is also a problem in the D9 Clube compensation plan, with how much an affiliate pays when they sign up dictating their income potential.

In MLM income potential should always be tied to sales performance, not how much affiliate pays in fees.

Personally I’m of the opinion that while a percentage of funds might be used to make bets, it’s probably not enough to pay the ROIs D9 Clube promise their affiliates.

Danilo Santana’s participation in OneThor demonstrates an existing familiarity with Ponzi schemes, weighing against giving D9 Clube the benefit of the doubt.

If indeed newly invested funds are being used to pay off existing investors, then like all Ponzi schemes D9 Clube will collapse once affiliate recruitment dies down.

Mathematically this will see the majority of D9 Clube affiliates lose money.

Life is about taking risks at some given times for the strong hearted, the earlier the better, give it a second thought and stay where you are. We are all different in our take. D9 is real, get in, earn and move on.